An End to Suffering: The Buddha in the World

Pankaj Mishra

In approaching Buddhism in An End to Suffering, Pankaj Mishra leavens
history with personal anecdote and travel narrative. He writes about
his own search for meaning, his visit to the birthplace of the Buddha,
his changing feelings about and understanding of Buddhism, his ambivalent
feelings about a Western friend who converted, and so forth. There's much
here that's only incidentally connected to Buddhism: accounts of his
time spent in the Himalayan village of Mashobra, his experience visiting
London for the first time, his first visit to Kashmir, and so forth.

The more general material is wide-ranging, covering or at least touching
on the life of the Buddha, the history of Buddhism in India, the 19th
century invention of "Buddhism" by Orientalists such as de Körös,
Buddhism in the West, Ambedkarite neo-Buddhism, and so forth. Here again
there are diversions — to Japanese nationalism, Adam Smith and David
Hume and Western individualism, Gandhi and the modern history of India,
and much more.

Mishra's summaries of history and analyses of religion are easy to
read and mostly unobjectionable, but he is clearly not a historian by
training and the seams in the secondary sources he has stitched together
are sometimes visible. And in a few places his generalisations go
completely awry, with nonsense such as "the early Indians, faced with
problems of subsistence, couldn't but be materialists".

Mishra is primarily interested in the philosophical ideas underpinning
Buddhism and in how they can be related to Western philosophy.
There's almost nothing about Buddhism in Southeast or East Asia, or
about Buddhist ritual and practice. And Mishra's view of Buddhism seems
somewhat idealised, often contrasted with a fundamentalist Hinduism he
finds uncongenial.

I found the more personal material in An End to Suffering the most
appealing; for the history I might have preferred more specialised works.
Mishra's approach falls nicely, however, between academic studies and
"pop" presentations pitched to New Age preconceptions. I recommend An
End to Suffering to anyone curious about Buddhism who is familiar with
or interested in Nietzsche, Proust and Plato — it should be a hit with
Mishra's regular audience at the New York Review of Books.